Watch 8 Dialogue-Heavy Scenes from ‘The Hateful Eight’

Watch 8 Dialogue-Heavy Scenes from 'The Hateful Eight'

“Finally, the issue of white supremacy is being talked about and dealt with. And it’s what the movie’s about […] It was already in the script. It was already in the footage we shot. It just happens to be timely right now. We’re not trying to make it timely. It is timely. I love the fact that people are talking and dealing with the institutional racism that has existed in this country and been ignored. I feel like it’s another ’60s moment, where the people themselves had to expose how ugly they were before things could change. I’m hopeful that that’s happening now.”

Words from Quentin Tarantino in an extensive interview he gave to New York magazine earlier this summer, which traveled widely, and caused a bit of a stir, as you can imagine. He did so again in a more recent New York Times piece (the Bret Easton Ellis conversation in which he slammed “Selma” and challenged black culture critics).

Tarantino was responding to questions about making the movie “feel contemporary,” speaking to present-day topical matters – specifically, whether “what’s happening in Baltimore and Ferguson find its way into ‘The Hateful Eight’,” the writer/director’s upcoming new work.

“My movie is about the country being torn apart by [the Civil War],” he said, “and the racial aftermath, six, seven, eight, ten years later. The issue of white supremacy is being talked about and dealt with, and it’s what the movie’s about.”

We’ll see. The 70mm projected film is set for release in select theaters on Christmas Day & everywhere on January 8th, 2016.

The story set up for “Hateful Eight” reads as follows: Set years after the end of the Civil War, a stagecoach hurtles through the wintry Wyoming landscape. In it are bounty hunter John Ruth (Russell) and his fugitive Daisy Domergue (Leigh), who are on their way to the town of Red Rock, where John Ruth, known in these parts as “The Hangman,” will bring Domergue to justice. Along the road, they encounter two strangers: Major Marquis Warren (Samuel L. Jackson), a black former union soldier turned infamous bounty hunter, and Chris Mannix (Walton Goggins), a southern renegade who claims to be the town’s new Sheriff. Their progress halted by a blizzard, the 4 (Ruth, Domergue, Warren and Mannix) seek refuge at Minnie’s Haberdashery, a stagecoach stopover on a mountain pass. There, they are greeted not by the proprietor but by 4 unfamiliar faces: Bob (Bichir), who’s taking care of Minnie’s while she’s visiting her mother, is holed up with Oswaldo Mobray (Roth), the hangman of Red Rock, cow-puncher Joe Gage (Madsen), and Confederate General Sanford Smithers (Dern). As the storm overtakes the mountainside stopover, the 8 travelers come to learn they may not make it to Red Rock after all…

The movie’s ensemble cast is led by Samuel L. Jackson as Major Marquis Warren, who’s joined by Kurt Russell as John “The Hangman” Ruth, and Jennifer Jason Leigh as Daisy Domergue.

The rest of the cast includes Walton Goggins as Chris Mannix, Demian Bichir as Bob, Tim Roth as Oswaldo Mobray, Michael Madsen as Joe Gage, and Bruce Dern General Sanford Smithers.